Submissions Accepted for ITC Sculpture Garden

Submissions Accepted for ITC Sculpture Garden
Submissions Accepted for ITC Sculpture Garden — pixabay.com
0Comments

Submissions Accepted for ITC Sculpture Garden

The City of Moscow Arts Department seeks three-dimensional artworks for a one-year installation at the Intermodal Transit Center Sculpture Garden. Proposals will be accepted via Submittable through April 21.

All submissions will be reviewed by a selection panel and a total of four sculptures will be selected for installation. Each selected artist will have their piece installed in the Sculpture Garden through May 2024 and will also receive an honorarium of $600 for the loan of their artwork.

The full project description and submission requirements are available here: https://moscowarts.submittable.com/submit/ec8ac3fd-f06c-43e9-90ac-bc822d71674c/moscow-public-art-2023-intermodal-transit-center-sculpture-garden


Original source can be found here.



Related

Senator Mike Crapo, US Senator for Idaho

Senator Mike Crapo highlights labor day celebrations and economic policy impacts

Senator Mike Crapo used his X account in early September to recognize Labor Day, discuss economic effects linked to extended tax cuts from the Trump administration, and announce a key hearing by the Senate Finance Committee.

Senator Mike Crapo, US Senator for Idaho

Senator Mike Crapo highlights rural health investment and reform priorities in recent posts

Senator Mike Crapo posted on September 4, 2025 about strengthening Medicare, Medicaid, and making major investments in rural health through new legislation.

Senator Mike Crapo

Senators introduce bipartisan Headwaters Protection Act targeting U.S. forest health

U.S. Senators Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), Jim Risch (R-Idaho), Michael Bennet (D-Colorado), John Hickenlooper (D-Colorado), and Ben Ray Luján (D-New Mexico) have introduced the Headwaters Protection Act, a bipartisan bill aimed at strengthening…

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from North Idaho Times.